I.D.
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- $7.99
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- $7.99
Publisher Description
A dystopian tale that analyzes the conflict between perception and identity through the struggle of three people who consider a “body transplant” as a solution to their lives.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Identity is as malleable as clay in this contemplative work. Three people seek full-body transplants: Noa, a frustrated youth; Charlotte, a world-weary writer; and Mike, a guarded ex-con. Though the procedure is in the riskiest throes of its infancy, they are determined to go through with it for sometimes tragic reasons. Though these characters occupy a world of space colonization, worsening civil unrest, and experimental neurosurgery, the details are only suggested; this is a decidedly intimate take on dystopia. The story is refreshing, but the book's depth suffers from its brief length. Rios's (Pretty Deadly) art is an unqualified delight: her feathery lines bring a nuance of emotion to each and every expression, and her use of red gives the world a humming tension. This is a thought-provoking work that prods at issues of gender, crime, and guilt, and could have taken even more time to explore its themes.